TY - JOUR T1 - Comprehensive Arthritis Referral Study — Phase 2: Analysis of the Comprehensive Arthritis Referral Tool JF - The Journal of Rheumatology JO - J Rheumatol SP - 1980 LP - 1989 DO - 10.3899/jrheum.140167 VL - 41 IS - 10 AU - Andrew E. Thompson AU - Sara L. Haig AU - Nicole G.H. LeRiche AU - Gina Rohekar AU - Sherry Rohekar AU - Janet E. Pope Y1 - 2014/10/01 UR - http://www.jrheum.org/content/41/10/1980.abstract N2 - Objective. Rheumatologists triage referrals to assess those patients who may benefit from early intervention. We describe a referral tool and formally evaluate its sensitivity for urgent and early inflammatory arthritis (EIA) referrals. Methods. All referrals received on a standardized referral tool were reviewed by a rheumatologist and, based on the information conferred, assigned a triage grade using a previously described triage system. Each referral was also dichotomized as suspected EIA or not. After the initial rheumatologic assessment, the diagnosis was recorded and a consultation grade, blinded to referral grade, was assigned to each case. Agreement between referral and consultation grades was assessed. A regression analysis was performed to determine factors that predicted truly urgent referrals including EIA. Results. We evaluated 696 referrals. A total of 210 (30.2%) were categorized as urgent at the time of consultation. The referral tool was able to successfully detect 169 of these referrals (sensitivity 80.5%, specificity 79.4%). EIA occurred in 95 (13.6%); of those referrals, 86 were correctly classified as urgent at the time of triage (sensitivity 90.5%, specificity 69.6%). Items that helped correctly discriminate urgent or EIA referrals included patient age < 60, duration of disease, morning stiffness, patient-reported joint swelling, a personal or family history of psoriasis, urgency as rated by referring physician, prior assessment by a rheumatologist, elevated C-reactive protein, and a positive rheumatoid factor. Conclusion. A 1-page referral tool that includes parts completed by the referring physician and patient has good sensitivity to detect urgent referrals including EIA. ER -